Use the guest operating system's tools to partition and format the new drive for use. It appears to your guest operating system as a new, blank hard disk. The wizard creates the new virtual disk.When you have set the filename and location you want to use and have made any selections you want to make on the advanced settings screen, click Finish. Nonpersistent changes to the disk are discarded when you power off or revert to the snapshot.Persistent changes are immediately and permanently written to the disk.If you select Independent, you have the following options: Independent disks are not included in the snapshot. In most cases, this is the setting you want with Independent deselected. Normal disks are included in the snapshot. For more information on the snapshot feature, see Using the Snapshot. This is useful in certain special-purpose configurations in which you want to exclude disks from the snapshot. On the advanced settings screen, you can also specify a disk mode. If you want to specify a device node for your virtual disk, click Advanced. To find a different folder, click Browse. Accept the default filename and location for the virtual disk file or change it, if you want to use a different name or location.You should split your virtual disk if it is stored on a FAT32 file system. You may also specify whether you want the virtual disk created as one large file or split into a set of 2GB files. You can set a size between 2GB and 256GB for a SCSI virtual disk or 128GB for an IDE virtual disk. If you do not select this option, the virtual disk's files start small and grow as needed, but they can never grow larger than the size you set here. If you wish, select Allocate all disk space now.Īllocating all the space at the time you create the virtual disk gives somewhat better performance, but it requires as much disk space as the size you specify for the virtual disk. Set the capacity for the new virtual disk.Choose whether you want the virtual disk to be an IDE disk or a SCSI disk.Select Create a New Virtual Disk, then click Next.The Add Hardware Wizard guides you through the steps to create your virtual disk.
#Vhd vmware workstation 10 windows#
Note: If you have a Windows NT 4.0 guest with a SCSI virtual disk, you cannot addīoth an additional SCSI disk and an IDE disk to the configuration. If it is not, shut down the guest operating system normally, then click Power Off on the VMware Workstation toolbar. Use the virtual machine settings editor ( VM > Settings) to add a new virtual disk to your virtual machine. A virtual IDE drive can be stored on an IDE drive or on a SCSI drive. It does not matter whether the physical disk that holds the files is IDE or SCSI. Virtual disks are stored as files on the host computer or on a network file server. For details on connecting these devices, see Connecting to a Generic SCSI Device.Īdding Virtual Disks to a Virtual Machine Many other SCSI devices can be connected to a virtual machine using the host operating system's generic SCSI driver. VMware Workstation does not support playing DVD movies in a virtual machine. A virtual machine can read data from a DVD-ROM disc. Any of these devices can be a virtual hard disk or DVD or CD-ROM drive. VMware Workstation virtual machines can use up to four IDE devices and up to seven SCSI devices. Features | Documentation | Knowledge Base | Discussion Forums